The US Federal Reserve's chairman, Ben S Bernanke, sharpened his insistence Wednesday that the Fed remains committed to its economic stimulus campaign and that it did not intend to signal it was lowering its sights in recent weeks.
Bernanke said that the Fed expected the economy to gain strength in the coming months, potentially allowing the Fed to decelerate its stimulus campaign not because it has changed its goals but because it has begun to achieve them.
But he warned that Congress itself remains the greatest obstacle to faster growth. Federal spending cuts are reducing growth this year by about 1.5 percentage points, he said. While the Fed expects the impact to diminish next year, he said there was a risk Congress would create new problems for the economy.
"The risks remain that tight federal fiscal policy will restrain economic growth over the next few quarters by more than we currently expect, or that the debate concerning other fiscal policy issues, such as the status of the debt ceiling, will evolve in a way that could hamper the recovery," Bernanke said during a biannual appearance before the House Financial Services Committee.
Wednesday may have marked the last time that Bernanke will appear before the committee to report on the Fed's conduct of monetary policy. He will conclude his second term as chairman at the end of January and is widely expected to step down. Members of both parties took the opportunity to praise him, although Republicans generally added that they opposed the Fed's recent efforts.
"You acted boldly and decisively and creatively - very creatively, I might add," said the committee's chairman, Texas Republican Jeb Hensarling.
"You have never been boring," said New York Democrat Carolyn Maloney.
Bernanke then did his very best to be boring, sending the message to markets that had been roiled by his comments last month that it was much ado about nothing.
The shabby condition of the economy has become the constant background for Bernanke's public appearances. Unemployment remains stubbornly common, inflation has sagged to the lowest pace on record and growth is tepid.
Bernanke's message Wednesday was that the Fed will begin to decelerate only if those problems continue to diminish. If unemployment stays high, the Fed will keep buying bonds. If inflation stays low, the Fed will keep buying bonds. If growth weakens, the Fed will keep buying bonds. Indeed, he revived a talking point from earlier this year in insisting that the Fed was willing to increase the volume of its monthly purchases if it decided that more stimulus was necessary.
"Because our asset purchases depend on economic and financial developments, they are by no means on a preset course," Bernanke told the committee.
Bernanke has adopted a stronger tone in particular on the subject of inflation. Fed officials insisted for much of the year that they were not concerned about the sagging pace of inflation, which has fallen to the lowest pace on record. Prices increased by just one per cent during the 12 months that ended in May, well below the two per cent pace that the Fed considers most healthy. In recent weeks, the Fed has shifted its tone, emphasising that it wants prices to rise more quickly.
On Wednesday Bernanke put inflation alongside unemployment as the reasons for the Fed's commitment to its stimulus campaign: "Our intention is to keep monetary policy highly accommodative for the foreseeable future," he said, "because inflation is below our target and unemployment is quite high."
The central bank says it plans to hold short-term interest rates near zero at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6.5 per cent. It also is expanding its holdings of mortgage-backed and Treasury securities by $85 billion a month in an effort to accelerate the pace of employment growth.
Bernanke repeated his comments earlier this month that the Fed is considering "changing the mix of tools" by reducing the pace of asset purchases later this year, but at the same time suggesting it will extend the duration of near-zero rates. He said that this plan enjoyed "good support" from other Fed officials. He also emphasised that such a cut was not a foregone conclusion.
"If the outlook for employment were to become relatively less favourable, if inflation did not appear to be moving back toward two per cent, or if financial conditions - which have tightened recently - were judged to be insufficiently accommodative to allow us to attain our mandated objectives, the current pace of purchases could be maintained for longer," Bernanke said in his prepared remarks.
His likely departure, however, means that his credibility increasingly depends on convincing investors that the rest of the Fed's policy-making committee shares his views and is committed to maintaining the same policies even if he departs.
That task has been complicated by the fragmentation of the committee's views about asset purchases. About half of the 19 officials who participate in meetings of the Fed's policy-making committee indicated before the committee's most recent meeting last month that they expected an end to asset purchases later this year, while the rest - including Bernanke - see a need for purchases into 2014.
The announcement last month that the Fed expects to reduce its asset purchases later this year drove up interest rates on mortgages and other loans. Some investors concluded that the Fed was curtailing its ambitions for the recovery, while others saw evidence that the Fed was overly optimistic in its forecasts.
Bernanke described that response as "unwelcome," but he added that it had likely reduced some "excessively risky or leveraged positions" - easing concerns among some Fed officials that its efforts were seeding new bubbles.
He downplayed concerns that the recent rate increases had undermined economic activity. "Housing activity and prices seem likely to continue to recover, notwithstanding the recent increases in mortgage rates," he said.
©2013 The New York Times News Service
KEEPING THE OPTIONS OPEN
Chairman Ben Bernanke said he expects the US Federal Reserve to start scaling back its $85-billion monthly bond-repurchase programme later this year, but left the options open. Some highlights
Bernanke said that the Fed expected the economy to gain strength in the coming months, potentially allowing the Fed to decelerate its stimulus campaign not because it has changed its goals but because it has begun to achieve them.
But he warned that Congress itself remains the greatest obstacle to faster growth. Federal spending cuts are reducing growth this year by about 1.5 percentage points, he said. While the Fed expects the impact to diminish next year, he said there was a risk Congress would create new problems for the economy.
"The risks remain that tight federal fiscal policy will restrain economic growth over the next few quarters by more than we currently expect, or that the debate concerning other fiscal policy issues, such as the status of the debt ceiling, will evolve in a way that could hamper the recovery," Bernanke said during a biannual appearance before the House Financial Services Committee.
Wednesday may have marked the last time that Bernanke will appear before the committee to report on the Fed's conduct of monetary policy. He will conclude his second term as chairman at the end of January and is widely expected to step down. Members of both parties took the opportunity to praise him, although Republicans generally added that they opposed the Fed's recent efforts.
"You acted boldly and decisively and creatively - very creatively, I might add," said the committee's chairman, Texas Republican Jeb Hensarling.
"You have never been boring," said New York Democrat Carolyn Maloney.
Bernanke then did his very best to be boring, sending the message to markets that had been roiled by his comments last month that it was much ado about nothing.
The shabby condition of the economy has become the constant background for Bernanke's public appearances. Unemployment remains stubbornly common, inflation has sagged to the lowest pace on record and growth is tepid.
Bernanke's message Wednesday was that the Fed will begin to decelerate only if those problems continue to diminish. If unemployment stays high, the Fed will keep buying bonds. If inflation stays low, the Fed will keep buying bonds. If growth weakens, the Fed will keep buying bonds. Indeed, he revived a talking point from earlier this year in insisting that the Fed was willing to increase the volume of its monthly purchases if it decided that more stimulus was necessary.
"Because our asset purchases depend on economic and financial developments, they are by no means on a preset course," Bernanke told the committee.
Bernanke has adopted a stronger tone in particular on the subject of inflation. Fed officials insisted for much of the year that they were not concerned about the sagging pace of inflation, which has fallen to the lowest pace on record. Prices increased by just one per cent during the 12 months that ended in May, well below the two per cent pace that the Fed considers most healthy. In recent weeks, the Fed has shifted its tone, emphasising that it wants prices to rise more quickly.
On Wednesday Bernanke put inflation alongside unemployment as the reasons for the Fed's commitment to its stimulus campaign: "Our intention is to keep monetary policy highly accommodative for the foreseeable future," he said, "because inflation is below our target and unemployment is quite high."
The central bank says it plans to hold short-term interest rates near zero at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6.5 per cent. It also is expanding its holdings of mortgage-backed and Treasury securities by $85 billion a month in an effort to accelerate the pace of employment growth.
Bernanke repeated his comments earlier this month that the Fed is considering "changing the mix of tools" by reducing the pace of asset purchases later this year, but at the same time suggesting it will extend the duration of near-zero rates. He said that this plan enjoyed "good support" from other Fed officials. He also emphasised that such a cut was not a foregone conclusion.
"If the outlook for employment were to become relatively less favourable, if inflation did not appear to be moving back toward two per cent, or if financial conditions - which have tightened recently - were judged to be insufficiently accommodative to allow us to attain our mandated objectives, the current pace of purchases could be maintained for longer," Bernanke said in his prepared remarks.
His likely departure, however, means that his credibility increasingly depends on convincing investors that the rest of the Fed's policy-making committee shares his views and is committed to maintaining the same policies even if he departs.
That task has been complicated by the fragmentation of the committee's views about asset purchases. About half of the 19 officials who participate in meetings of the Fed's policy-making committee indicated before the committee's most recent meeting last month that they expected an end to asset purchases later this year, while the rest - including Bernanke - see a need for purchases into 2014.
The announcement last month that the Fed expects to reduce its asset purchases later this year drove up interest rates on mortgages and other loans. Some investors concluded that the Fed was curtailing its ambitions for the recovery, while others saw evidence that the Fed was overly optimistic in its forecasts.
Bernanke described that response as "unwelcome," but he added that it had likely reduced some "excessively risky or leveraged positions" - easing concerns among some Fed officials that its efforts were seeding new bubbles.
He downplayed concerns that the recent rate increases had undermined economic activity. "Housing activity and prices seem likely to continue to recover, notwithstanding the recent increases in mortgage rates," he said.
©2013 The New York Times News Service
KEEPING THE OPTIONS OPEN
Chairman Ben Bernanke said he expects the US Federal Reserve to start scaling back its $85-billion monthly bond-repurchase programme later this year, but left the options open. Some highlights
- Fed likely to reduce monthly bond buys later this year and halt them by mid-2014, as long as the economic recovery unfolds. The current pace of purchases could be reduced "somewhat more quickly" if economic conditions improved faster, but "could be maintained for longer" if the labour market outlook darkened, or inflation did not appear to be rising toward its two per cent goal
- Officials will keep rates near zero at least until the jobless rate, which stood at 7.6 per cent in June, falls to 6.5 per cent, as long as inflation remains in check
- About the Fed's bloated balance sheet, Bernanke suggested the central bank would hold the government bonds it has bought for a long time, if not to maturity, and reinvest any proceeds to keep its balance sheet from shrinking quickly
- The US economic recovery was continuing at a moderate pace thanks to a stronger housing sector, which was helping conditions in the labour market improve gradually, but the Fed felt the risks to the economy had decreased since the fall. But higher taxes and cuts in federal government spending could turn out to exert a larger drag on US growth than expected, and that worsening conditions overseas could hurt conditions back home
Source: Reuters